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Wednesday, February 28, 2018
Easy Chocolate Souffle
The word souffle is the past of a French word souffler. The definition of souffler means to "blow up" or more loosely "puff up" A souffle is a lightly baked cake made with egg yolks and beaten egg whites that are combined with other ingredients to make the dish either a savory main dish or a sweet dessert. There are two essential components that make up a souffle. First, it is a French creme patisserie based / flavored cream sauce or puree and second that the egg whites have been beaten to soft peak meringue.
The flavor comes from the base and the egg whites offer the lift to puff up. The flavor can come from cheeses, jams, fruits, or chocolate. Many times the top of the souffle will be punctured and more sauce will be poured on the top.
Easy Chocolate Souffle
recipe resource here
½ cup heavy cream
12 ounces semi-sweet chocolate chips
½ teaspoon vanilla
pinch of salt
2 egg yolks
6 egg whites
2 tablespoons sugar
butter and sugar for greasing ramekins
Instructions
Prepare ramekins by greasing the bottom and sides with butter. Sprinkle a little sugar on them.
In a small saucepan, heat the heavy cream over medium heat. Put the chopped chocolate into a mixing bowl. When the cream starts to simmer, immediately remove it from the heat and pour over the chocolate. Let it stand for a couple minutes and then stir it until smooth.
Add the vanilla, pinch of salt, and egg yolks to the chocolate and stir until thoroughly combined and smooth. Set aside to cool.
Preheat the oven to 425 degrees.
Put the egg whites into the bowl of a stand mixer. Whip on high, gradually adding in the sugar, until the whites form stiff peaks. This should take several minutes. Stiff peaks mean you can stick a spoon or rubber scraper in and pull it out and the egg whites form a little self-holding peak instead of just melting back into place.
Fold the egg white mixture into the cooled chocolate mixture, until it seems pretty well combined. Folding means using a rubber scraper/spatula to scrape down to the bottom and fold it over onto the top, turning your bowl as you go. You'll know it is combined when you can't see bits of the white egg anymore. Folding keeps it fluffy, while mixing would kill the fluffiness. Pour into the prepared ramekins.
Put them in the oven and close the door. Reduce the heat setting to 375 degrees. Bake for 15 minutes for small ramekins, and 25 minutes for larger ones.
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